System and method for enhanced broadcasting and interactive

ABSTRACT

An enhanced interactive television broadcast is disclosed wherein an audio/video broadcast is viewed on a first display system, and an “enhancement” to the broadcast is simultaneously viewed or experienced on a second, separate display system. The “enhancement” is synchronized to the broadcast, and delivered to a user as a code fragments, such as a JavaScript message. URLs are not required. Portions or elements of a web page are reduced to single code fragments, rendered client-side upon receipt. The invention implements Network Time Protocol (NTP) to synchronize the client&#39;s application clock to global time. Messages, or JavaScript code fragments, are time-stamped and evaluated based on the client&#39;s application clock.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

This invention relates to television broadcasting and viewers'experience therewith. More particularly, the invention relates to thedegree with which a viewer can interact with or become a part of aconventional television broadcast.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Television has long been enjoyed in our society as a means fordelivering information for the enhancement of knowledge as well as fordelivering content with entertainment value. In all of its uses,however, television has remained a one-way experience for the viewer,wherein viewers do not have the opportunity or ability to interact withthe content of a television broadcast. In fact, television has in manycases been criticized for simply “feeding” broadcast material to viewerswithout requiring any thought, participation, or feedback from theviewers. For these reasons, television is often regarded as having adeleterious effect on the development of children's communication skillsand thought processes.

Television Journalist Edward R. Murrow said in TV Guide, December, 1958,“This instrument can teach, it can illuminate; yes, and it can eveninspire. But it can do so only to the extent that humans are determinedto use it to those ends. Otherwise it is merely light and wires in abox.” Indeed, nearly half a century later, utilizing television foreducational purposes continues to be an area to which much attention isfocused. Many of today's television programs are geared towardeducational purposes, schools use televisions as educational tools, andclasses can even be taught television networks. Yet even with the allthe effort to utilize television as an educational tool, televisionremains a one-way experience for a viewer, continuing to charm “couchpotatoes” the world over. The criticism remains that television dullsthe mind through its inability to provide an interactive environment forviewers.

While television remains devoid of interactive experiences, thepotential of interaction between multiple persons has been greatlyheightened in recent years due to the popularity of the Internet. TheInternet provides a powerful network for exchanging content, messages,and user inputs, enabling various users to achieve a level ofinteraction that was previously unknown. However, this interaction istypically limited to individual instances, making large broadcastinteractive experiences impossible. The camaraderie generated bypost-broadcast discussions amongst viewers who witnessed the same showsimply is not available to computer users who engage in uniqueinteractive sessions not experienced by the number of users typicallyreached by a television broadcast. Furthermore, this interaction hasbeen constrained to the realm of computers, and there remains a lack inthe technology for providing systems which allow or support viewerinteraction and participation in television programming.

Many recent prior art television based systems have attempted to addressthe need for interactivity between television and its viewers. U.S. Pat.No. 4,926,255 by Von Kohorn discloses a system wherein users canindividually answer questions related to a television broadcast, andreceive information as to the accuracy of their answers. However, VonKohorn does not provide the ability for users to interact with oneanother during a television broadcast such as by competing against eachother and receiving relative scores. Conversely, the prior art system ofU.S. Pat. No. 5,343,239 by Lappington, et al., teaches a system that hasthe capability to store a plurality of audience scores at a centrallocation. However, Lappington requires each user to manually deliver hisindividual result to the central location, and further fails to disclosea method for comparing the plurality of results for purposes of rankingor scoring the users relative to one another. Thus, no directinteraction is available. U.S. Pat. No. 5,013,038, by Luxenberg, et al.,does disclose a system that enables remote users to compete relative toone another. However, this system requires individual users to telephonea central system for entering their respective results, and providesrelative scoring for only a small, statistically selected group ofusers.

Thus, none of these prior art systems enables remote users to interactwith or to compete with each other relative to a television program, toreceive relative scoring for the entire group of remote users, or toreceive relative scoring for any customized user-selected subgroup ofusers. Furthermore, none of these systems specifically provides for theintegration of Web content with traditional television broadcasting.

More recently, television-integrated Web access has become known in theart. However, these later systems generally continue to fail to provideinteractive capabilities for the user to communicate with the content ofthe television program. These systems operate by controlling a user'sweb browser to automatically retrieve web pages during the time of atelevision broadcast. However, these systems only deliver websiteaddresses (URLs) to a user and do not allow for the involvement of theuser in the broadcast content. They merely provide supplemental contentto be read, viewed, or heard during a television broadcast.Consequently, there is not currently a means for a television viewer toenjoy an interactive experience with the content and timeline of atelevision broadcast or with other viewers.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The invention seeks to provide television audiences with the possibilityfor viewer participation in a television broadcast through interactionwith the broadcast content. The present invention utilizes a deliverynetwork, such as the Internet, for delivering television broadcast“enhancements” to a viewer, such that the viewer may not only watch atelevision program, but also can participate in and enjoy a previouslyunknown interactive experience with the content and timeline of thatprogram. The interaction of the present invention can either be drivenexclusively client-side or require client-server interaction.

In the exclusively client-side interaction feature of the presentinvention, the user receives information from a broadcast and is notrequired to return information to a broadcaster or to any other remotelocation. Instead, a custom software application is placed on the user'scomputer to act as an interface and to facilitate the interactiveexperience locally. Thus, the interactivity occurs client side, incontrast to prior art interactivity which requires users to interactdirectly with the server.

The client-server interaction feature of the present invention doesrequire users to communicate directly with the server. However, Thisform of interaction enables users to alter content of a broadcast inprogress. The client-server interaction enables a broadcaster to utilizeand respond to user input, as by altering or creating broadcast contentin direct response to users' inputs to the server. For example, userscan participate in a football game as it is broadcast on television byproviding predictions, requests or suggestions to a broadcaster servercomputer during the television game broadcast. Producers, broadcasters,coaching staff, or others involved with the football game will receivethis users' input, consider it, and be influenced to change the courseof the game or the manner in which it is being broadcast. Thus, users ofsystems of the present invention are provided with a venue for directparticipation in live events as they are broadcast on television.

Embodiments of the present invention utilizing either form ofinteraction describe above both feature synchronized timingcharacteristics. The enhancements used to enhance television programmingare related to the television broadcast content and are synchronized intime with the television broadcast. The resulting effect is one ofinteraction with the television broadcast in a realistic, time-sensitivesetting.

Embodiments of the present invention also enable users to compete witheach other, either against the totality of all users or against only asubset of users. In the latter case, the subset of users may bepre-defined or, alternatively, may be customized and selected by oneuser.

The foregoing and other objects, features, and advantages of the presentinvention will become apparent from a reading of the following detaileddescription of exemplary embodiments thereof, which illustrate thefeatures and advantages of the invention in conjunction with referencesto the accompanying drawing Figures.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 illustrates an enhanced broadcasting system according to anembodiment of the invention;

FIG. 2 illustrates an exemplary DHTML document layout according to anembodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 3 illustrates an exemplary DHTML document, after receiving a codefragment input, according to an embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 4 is a flow chart illustrating functionality exemplary of aclient-side software application according to an embodiment of thepresent invention;

FIG. 5 illustrates an exemplary scenario occurring in an enhancedbroadcasting system according to an embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 6 illustrates a score leaderboard exemplary of one feature of thepresent invention;

FIG. 7 illustrates an alternative version of a score leaderboardexemplary of a different feature of the present invention; and

FIG. 8 is an exemplary data entry dialogue box for customizing yetanother version of an alternative score leaderboard, illustrative of yetanother feature of the present invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

In the following description of the exemplary embodiments of the presentinvention reference is made to the accompanying drawings which form apart thereof, and in which are shown by way of illustration specificembodiments in which the invention may be practiced. It is to beunderstood that other embodiments may be utilized and structural andfunctional changes may be made without departing from the scope of thepresent invention.

As used herein, the term “message” may be used, but is not limited, todescribe a segment of code that is received, analyzed, and rendered by asoftware application. In the exemplary embodiments described herein,messages are embodied as “code fragments.” However, it is to beunderstood that the invention is directed to “messages” in a broadersense, wherein a message representing an enhancement can be any of anumber of forms, and is not limited to the exemplary code fragmentembodiment. Unlike “triggers,” which are used in Advanced TV EnhancementForum (ATVEF) standard applications, the code fragments of the presentinvention do not contain uniform resource locators (URLs). In contrast,the code fragments are specific instructions to an application or anDynamic Hypertext Markup Language (DHTML) document resident andexecutable on a computer to which the code fragments are delivered. Forexample, a software application may receive a code fragment written inJavaScript, evaluate it using a resident JavaScript interpreter, causinga side effect in the document object model (DOM) which causes the DHTMLdocument to be re-rendered within the HTML-enabled browser. Essentially,a screen display that is “visually described” by HTML code may have aportion of it change upon receipt of a code fragment that will causereplacement of only a portion of the entire screen's descriptive HTMLcode.

Additionally, the term “applets” is used to describe small applicationsthat are delivered from a server to a client over a computer network.Applets, which may or may not be written in the Java computer language,are resident and functional at the client-side, but typically cannot berun without a browser or an applet viewer.

As illustrated in FIG. 1, one embodiment of the system of the presentinvention is employed by a broadcaster 100 to deliver enhancedbroadcasting to its audience 102. In the exemplary enhanced broadcastingsystem, enhancements are delivered to users in the form of codefragments. The enhancements are designed to be correlated to content oftelevision broadcasts. For example, enhancements for a televisedfootball game could involve descriptions of football players,statistics, strategy planning, etc. for users at home. Enhancements fora televised quiz game show could involve quiz questions and scoringopportunities for users at home.

Enhancements are also correlated to television broadcasts with respectto time. In the case of pre-recorded automatic playback, an audio andvideo signal, such as a television signal, 104 is synchronized torelated enhancements (served as code fragments) 106 with respect to ahouse clock 108. The house clock 108 is so named because it is utilizedinternally by the broadcaster 100 to synchronize timing at both thebroadcaster station 110 and a broadcaster authoring system 112, which isused to create code fragments 106. House clock 108 is also used tosynchronize a push server 114, used to efficiently deliver codefragments 106 from authoring system 112 to a plurality of users 102. Thehouse clock 108 may be, for example, the Greenwich atomic clock, acesium oscillator, or a GPS receiver, all commonly used standards forprecision time synchronization. While the description herein continueswith references to house clock 108 as utilized for pre-recordedautomatic playback, it is to be understood that the present inventionalso may be used in the context of live broadcasts. In this case, houseclock 108 is not used to synchronize client computer 120 or authoringsystem 112. Instead, code fragments 106 are sent at the appropriatetimes relative to the live broadcast, and interpreted at the client side“as soon as possible.” That is, code fragments 106 are sent andinterpreted in real-time, concurrent with the live broadcasttransmission.

Broadcaster authoring system 112 is contemplated, within the teachingsof the present invention, as being computer-executable software thatenables broadcaster 100 to create code fragments 106 for the purpose ofenhancing the content of a particular broadcast. The software mayinclude a word processor, a programming compiler, or other standardmeans of text entry. The software may also include communication with anexternal media player, or include its own media player, for the purposeof pre-playing a broadcast to assist in the development of appropriateand related code fragments.

In accordance with the teachings of the present invention, the softwareis automated, such that a user of the authoring system can select apoint in time during the broadcast, indicate the preferred contents ofthe code fragment, and instruct the software to automatically produce aline of code descriptive of the indicated contents and including a timestamp for linking to the selected point in time. Also, the codefragments developed with the authoring system can be created and pusheddown manually, as is the case in a live-broadcast scenario in whichmessages are developed and delivered in real time.

For ease of use, the broadcast authoring software features the use oftemplates. Templates capture the structure of a message, having datafields representing each component portion of the message. Certainfields are pre-defined, and the additional fields are filled in by theauthoring system 112 as a user supplies the necessary information.Authoring system 112 then extracts the data from the data fields, andassembles the message. In the exemplary embodiment, the message is acode fragment. Once rendered and viewed by a user at the client side, acompleted code fragment represents an “enhancement.” By pre-definingcommonly used messages, such as code fragments or components thereof,and making them available as templates, users of authoring system 112need only enter limited information to complete construction of a codefragment.

For example, to create enhancements for supplementing a television gamequiz show broadcast, a question/answer template is utilized by authoringsystem 112. The template is pre-defined as to size, shape, appearance,placement, and other attributes that will define the question/answerenhancement's appearance on a computer screen when the template isrendered by Web browser software. The template lacks, however,substantive content describing any particular question or answer. Usersof authoring system 112 supply the empty data fields of the template,through their computer keyboard or other input device, with a questionand a set of multiple choice answers to appear in an enhancement. Whiledoing so, the rendered question/answer enhancement is displayed on aportion of the screen such that it continually updates according to theinformation being supplied by the user. In this way, the user canvisualize the end-product enhancement while he is in the process ofmodifying the code of a template for creating the completed codefragment that will describe the end-product enhancement.

Once received by client computer 120, code fragments 106 are processedin any of a number of ways. For example, code fragment 106 may act atclient computer 120 to set or change an internal controlling statevariable which would cause a presently displayed DHTML document to bere-rendered within Web browser 128. Alternatively, code fragment 106 cancause Web browser 128 to fetch a new DHTML document, or Web page, and toextract data from the fields of code fragment 106 to dynamically createand display the fetched DHTML document. Still another function of codefragment 106 is to cause a side effect, changing the DOM, which causesthe currently displayed DHTML document to be re-rendered. In all cases,once the re-rendering or fetching of the DHTML document is triggered,other information within the data fields of code fragments 106 isgleaned and utilized to construct the DHTML document, thereby providingupdated and continually evolving enhancements.

A complete code fragment is generated by the broadcaster authoringsoftware, as described above, using a combination of the information inthe pre-defined template and the information supplied by the user. Thesoftware also includes access to a database or other type of datastorage. Utilizing the software, users of authoring system 112 cancreate code fragments 106, associate them with time-stamps indicative ofrequested delivery time, and store them for future delivery during aparticular broadcast show.

In accordance with the teachings of the present invention, user 102 isable to simultaneously enjoy broadcast 104, which is delivered throughstandard broadcasting means 116 and on a receiver such as a television118, and to interact with the broadcast enhancements on a separatereceiver, such as a computer 120. The broadcaster houses Web server 122which serves assets 124 of DHTML documents or Web pages, related incontent to broadcast 104. In the exemplary embodiment illustrated inFIG. 1, assets 122 are served to individual users, or viewers, over acommunications network such as the Internet 126. The user's computer 120houses a web browser 128 and a customized software application, such asapplet 130. Applet 130 is embedded in DHTML document 200, where itreceives code fragments 106 via computer network 126. DHTML document 200and applet 130 are executable by Web browser 128, such that codefragments 106 are interpreted and rendered therein. Each code fragment106 describes only a portion of a larger image, causing the display ofweb browser 128, which appears on computer monitor 132, to be modifiedor updated upon receipt of each code fragment.

In an embodiment of the present invention, DHTML document 200 comprisesa top level frame set, as commonly utilized in the art. Applet 130 isembedded in DHTML document 200 in a hidden frame. Thus, when embeddedapplet 130 receives code fragments 106, code fragments 106 are evaluatedin the context of the top level frame set of DHTML document 200.

FIG. 2 and FIG. 3 illustrate an exemplary layout for a DHTML document200 with embedded applet 130. FIG. 2 illustrates an exemplary layout ofvarious frames within DHTML a top-level frame f₀ 202 and enclosesseveral lower level frames: f₁ frame 204, f₂ frame 206, f₃ frame 208,and a hidden frame 210. f₁ frame 204 can receive a question HTMLtemplate designed to present a question and four possible answers tousers of a system according to the present invention. The question HTMLtemplate includes an array or a table which is populated by elements ofcode fragments as they are received by Applet 130. Applet 130 resides inhidden frame 210 and receives code fragments 106 from push server 114,indicated at arrow 218. Applet 130 then analyzes, or evaluates, codefragments 106, as indicated at arrow 220 and explained in more detailbelow.

Exemplary code fragment 212 comprises an identifier 214 and fivearguments 216 to populate the array or table of the question HTMLtemplate within f₁ frame 204. When applet 130 receives code fragment212, identifier 214 indicates how the remaining arguments 216 will beanalyzed. Applet 130 serves the received code fragment 212 to aJavaScript interpreter, where a handler, designed to process aparticular type of message, process code fragment 212 according to itsmessage type. Code fragment 212 is accordingly served to Web browser128. In this exemplary scenario, identifier 214 is the letter, “q.” Thehandler contains code that, in case “q,” causes a “question template”HTML document to be populated by the remaining five arguments 216 ofcode fragment 212 and placed f₁ frame 204. The result of this populationis shown in FIG. 3 where f₁ frame 204 presents to a user the question300 and four possible answers 302 that were contained in as the lastfive arguments 216 and could fragment 212.

It is to be understood that DHTML document 200 can contain any number offrames, organized in any manner, and that each of the frames can containany HTML, or other, template. Code fragments can contain any number ortype of arguments, and applet 130 can evaluate code fragments in any ofa number of standard methods known in the art. The selection oftemplates for placement within different frames can be controlled withthe use of identifiers recognized by an applet as explain herein, or byany other means that will be apparent to those skilled in the art.

In addition to responding to code fragments received over the Internetto Web browser 128, DHTML document 200 also functions through directaudience participation. User 102 participates with broadcast 104 and Webcontent 124, 106 by providing input 134 to his computer through a userinput device 136, such as a keyboard, mouse, microphone, or otherperipheral device. DHTML document 200 recognizes and analyzes user input134, which is rendered by Web browser 128 and displayed on monitor 132.

Also supporting the interactive experience of the present invention isthe added feature of synchronization, which ensures that the contentdisplayed on the user's computer 120 is timed according to the contentdisplayed on television 118. Synchronization can be achieved in avariety of different ways. These can include real-time delivery methodsand Network Time Protocol (NTP) methods, though those skilled in the artwill appreciate that alternative synchronization protocols are withinthe scope of the present invention.

In a real-time delivery embodiment, code fragments 106 are delivered tousers according to the times they are to be viewed by the users. In thisembodiment, a user's client-side computer 120 will receive and render acode fragment immediately upon delivery.

In an alternate embodiment, code fragments 106 include time stamps. Inthis embodiment synchronization is achieved, for example, by NTP. Thisembodiment is more reliable than the previously disclosed embodiment incases where delivery times of code fragments are uncertain. Suchuncertainties can arise, for example, from network congestion or lowquality network service provided to users. NTP entails synchronizing theclient's application clock to “global time.” Global time is, in theexemplary embodiment shown, determined by house clock 108. Codefragments 106 sent to each user's computer (client computer) 120 aretime-stamped according to global time, and each client computer 120evaluates the code fragments based on the code fragment's synchronizedapplication clock. The code fragments are rendered by the clientcomputer at the time specified by the timestamps contained in each codefragment. The time stamps are read and interpreted by applet 130 in thecontext of the client computer's synchronized application clock. Thisputs the user in the same time frame as the broadcast content, yieldinga realistic, time-oriented, interactive experience.

FIG. 4 is a flow diagram illustrating logic that is exemplary of DHTMLdocument 200 with embedded applet 130. In step 400 client computer 120receives an input. This input may be a code fragment 106 sent by thebroadcaster and delivered over the Internet, or it may be an input 134from a user 102 of the system. In step 402, the source of the input isdetermined. If the input is a user input 134, it is automaticallydirected to Web browser 128 at step 404, where it is rendered withinDHTML document 200 therein at step 406. This will cause at least aportion of the current display of monitor 132 to change or update, as aresult of the user input 134.

For example, the user input 134 may be an answer in response to aquestion posed on the user's display monitor 132 or television 118. Ifthe user enters a correct answer, DHTML document 200 resident in Webbrowser 128 will cause monitor 132 to display a flashing “Correct!”graphic on the computer screen.

If, on the other hand, the computer input is determined at step 402 tobe a code fragment 106, embedded applet 130 receives the code fragmentat 408 and directs it to be analyzed at 410. The analysis is asdescribed with reference to FIG. 2 and FIG. 3, though it can involvefurther processing. Here, for example, the JavaScript interpreterrecognizes a time stamp indicating when code fragment 106 should berendered and displayed according to computer's 120 synchronizedapplication clock. Based on the analysis, Web browser 128 receives codefragment 106 at the correct time at 412, and subsequently, at 414, DHTML200 document therein renders the input received from the JavaScriptinterpreter.

For purposes of illustration, an exemplary scenario that may be employedwithin the scope of the present invention is provided. The exemplaryscenario involves a television game show in which users may both watchthe contestant on a television set and compete against the contestantthrough a computer. Both the individual users and the contestant arechallenged by the same game and are subject to the same timingconstraints and limitations. As a result, both the individual users andthe contestant can control the outcome of the game. Thus, unlikeordinary television, enhanced television systems of the presentinvention enable a user at home to participate in and to enjoy aninteractive experience by directly participating in the televised gameshow.

A sequence of events which may occur in the exemplary game show scenariois illustrated in FIG. 5. As previously described, a broadcast signal104 is sent by the broadcaster station 110, and broadcast enhancements106 is sent from broadcaster authoring system 112 by push server 114.The broadcast and its enhancements are synchronized according to houseclock 108. In this exemplary illustration of the present invention, thegame show comprises questions which both the television contestant andthe individual user may answer. Points are earned by each according towhether their respective answers are correct or incorrect.

For example, the game show may begin with a first question, sent in thebroadcast signal 104 and in a code fragment 106 created with broadcastauthoring system 112. This question is received in its broadcast form bya individual user's television at 500, and in its code fragment form bythe user's computer at 502. The user sees or hears the question when itis presented on his television at 504, and simultaneously sees or hearsthe question on his computer at 506. At this point in time 508, a periodof interaction 510 begins. The user is free to ponder and answer thequestion at 512, at any time within interaction period 510. At 514, whenthe contestant on television runs out of time or submits an answer thatmay be seen or heard by the user on the television, a code fragment issent or a previously-sent time stamp is read which causes the user tolose the ability to submit an answer to the computer. At this time 516the period of interaction 510 ends.

Thus, the contestant and the individual users are subject to the sametime constraints and rules. The contestant on television may be rewardedfor a correct answer to the question; similarly, if correct, theindividual user also will receive affirmation through a display or soundon the computer acknowledging such. With each new question, new periodsof interaction 510 occur, enabling an user to enjoy a unique,interactive experience that was unachievable prior to the presentinvention.

Another feature of the present invention is its ability to enable alarge number of remote users to compete against one another. Referringback to FIG. 1, assets 124 are communicated bi-directionally, such thatany individual user's 102 activity can be reported back to broadcaster100. By tracking and storing all incoming scoring data, users playing agame through the enhanced television systems of the present inventionand achieving various levels of scores can, in effect, compete againstone another.

FIG. 6 illustrates an exemplary procedure of the present invention inwhich users can actively compete against one another. As part of thedisplay hosted by a user's Web browser 128, a leaderboard 600 can beprovided in accordance with the teachings of the present invention toinform users of their relative scores. A “top scores” leaderboard, forexample, would display the names and ranks or scores of the highestranked users at any point in time during an enhanced television game orevent utilized by the present invention.

For example, the winning user would be named first in the leaderboard602, followed by the second place user 604, and so on. Such reporting ofwinning standings provides users of the system with an incentive tocontinue playing and attempting to win. An alternative to the “topscores” leaderboard is a “local scores” leaderboardas illustrated inFIG. 7. This local scores listing would be based upon each individualuser's standing. A “local scores” leaderboard 700 for a particular userwould include that user's rank or score 702 in the middle of the list,several users 504 ranked below that user, and several users 706 rankedabove the particular user.

The present invention provides yet another alternative mode ofcompetition. Rather than being able to view only the top scoring usersor the local scoring users, any user has the ability to select from avariety of pre-established groups of users, such that only usersbelonging to the selected group will appear on that group's leaderboard.In this manner, a user is able to organize and join groups of his or herpreference.

In an exemplary embodiment, a user who establishes a group will selectboth its name and password. The selected group name and password areproposed by the user to the broadcaster Web server 122, where they areverified for uniqueness. If no other group exists with an identicalname/password combination, Web server 122 designates the user-selectedgroup name and password.

Once a group is established, any user in possession of the group's nameand password can join that group, such as through the dialog box shownin FIG. 8. The user simply selects a desired group, such as through adrop-down menu 802, and enters the associated password, such as throughinput field 804. The information is then sent to Web server 122, whichrecognizes that the user is now a member of the selected group. During agame, Web server 122 delivers the scores of all users who have joinedthe group, and DHTML document 200 organizes those scores to create apersonalized leaderboard in accordance with the teachings of the presentinvention. In this way, a user can invite anyone, such as a familymember or friends, or any number of other users to join a customizedgroup competition. This feature of the present invention enables apersonal competitive ability not offered or found in prior art systems.

The foregoing description of the exemplary embodiments of the presentinvention has been presented for the purposes of illustration anddescription. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the scopeof the invention to the precise form disclosed. Many modifications andvariations of the present invention are possible in light of the aboveteachings. For example, broadcasts involving content other than gameshows may be utilized within the scope of the present invention. Also,displaying the enhanced portion of the broadcast of the presentinvention can be accomplished with alternative visual software otherthan a web browser or applet viewer. It is also contemplated as beingwithin the scope of the present invention to enable the user to submitinputs to the broadcaster for various alternative feedback purposes.Additionally, it is within the scope of the present invention for a userto select other users for the formation of a competitive group forpurposes of comparing scores such as in a leaderboard. The presentinvention also is not limited to being used for broadcast enhancementsand interaction across the Internet alone. Rather, the invention may beused for different types of enhancement programs across a wide varietyof computer and communications networks.

It is intended that the scope of the invention be limited not by thisdetailed description, but rather by the claims appended hereto.

1. An enhanced broadcasting system for presenting audio or videobroadcasts and related enhancements, the system comprising: a receiverfor receiving an audio and video broadcast signal; a first display unit,connected to the receiver, for displaying content of the audio and videobroadcast signal; a code fragment including at least one instructioncorrelated to the content of the audio and video broadcast signal; acomputer configured for receiving the code fragment; a storage mediumassociated with the computer that stores a document; the computerexecuting software for interpreting the instruction of the code fragmentand correlating the instruction of the code fragment to the audio andvideo broadcast signal with respect to time, and locally modifying thedocument in an exclusively local interaction based on the interpretedinstruction; and a second display unit, connected to the computer,having a screen display that displays the document at a first time anddisplays a subsequent modification to the document based upon theinterpreted instruction of the code fragment at a second time.
 2. Theenhanced broadcasting system of claim 1 further comprising: anapplication clock operatively connected to said computer andsynchronized to a house clock such that the broadcast signal and thecode fragment are correlated with respect to time.
 3. The enhancedbroadcasting system of claim 1 wherein the software is an applet.
 4. Theenhanced broadcasting system of claim 1 wherein the code fragment iswritten in JavaScript.
 5. The enhanced broadcasting system of claim 1wherein the computer receives the code fragment through a communicationnetwork.
 6. The enhanced broadcasting system of claim 5 wherein thecommunication network is the Internet.
 7. An enhancement for the contentof an audio and video broadcast, the enhancement comprising: a codefragment including at least one instruction correlated to the content ofthe audio and video broadcast and a time stamp such that updating of ascreen display is based upon an exclusively local interaction andinterpretation of the instruction of the code fragment and ischronologically synchronized to receipt of the broadcast.
 8. Theenhancement of claim 7 wherein the code fragment is written inJavaScript.
 9. A method for providing enhanced television broadcasting,the method comprising: selecting a common time for a synchronizedpresentation of an audio and video signal and a related enhancement, therelated enhancement including an instruction; broadcasting the audio andvideo signal for receipt by a broadcast receiver; sending the relatedenhancement from a server computer over a network for receipt by aclient computer; displaying the audio and video signal on a firstdisplay screen at the common time; interpreting at least one instructionincluded in the related enhancement, which instruction is correlated tothe content of the audio and video signal; locally modifying a documentin an exclusively local interaction based on the interpretedinstruction; and displaying the modified document on a screen displaywhich is updated based upon the interpreted instruction on a seconddisplay screen at the common time.
 10. The method for providing enhancedtelevision broadcasting of claim 9, wherein the related enhancementcomprises a code fragment.
 11. The method for providing enhancedtelevision broadcasting of claim 10 wherein the code fragment comprisesa timestamp.
 12. The method for providing enhanced televisionbroadcasting of claim 10, wherein the first display screen isoperatively connected to a television and the second display screen isoperatively connected to a computer monitor.
 13. The method forproviding enhanced television broadcasting of claim 9, furthercomprising; receiving an input from a user of the client computer;executing software on the client computer to analyze the input;assigning points to the user according to the analyzed input, such thatthe user accumulates an earned score.
 14. The method for providingenhanced television broadcasting of claim 13, further comprising:delivering to a particular user earned scores of each of a plurality ofusers; organizing the delivered earned scores accordingly to theirrelative values; and displaying the organized earned scores to be viewedby the particular user.
 15. The method for providing enhanced televisionbroadcasting of claim 14 wherein the plurality of users is selected bythe particular user.
 16. The method for providing enhanced televisionbroadcasting of claim 14 wherein the delivering of earned scores of aplurality of users to a particular user is in response to the particularuser joining a group comprising the plurality of users.
 17. The methodfor providing enhanced television broadcasting of claim 16 wherein thejoining comprises the steps of: providing to the server computer a groupname assigned to the group; and providing to the server computer apassword assigned to the group and uniquely associated with the groupname.
 18. The method for providing enhanced television broadcasting ofclaim 13 further comprising: assigning a group name to a group, thegroup capable of being accessed by a plurality of users; assigning apassword to the group, such that the group name and the password areuniquely associated; storing the uniquely associated group name andpassword on the server computer; receiving at the server computer aquery group name and a query password from a joining user; comparing thequery group name and query password received from the joining user tothe uniquely associated group name and password stored on the servercomputer; providing the joining user access to the group if the querygroup name and query password are identical to the uniquely associatedgroup name and password stored on the server computer; and reporting toeach user having access to the group the earned score of all usershaving access to the group.
 19. The method for providing enhancedtelevision broadcasting of claim 18 further comprising: ranking theearned scores of the plurality of users having access to the group todetermine a relative score for each user having access to the group; andreporting, to each user having access to the group, the relative scores.20. The method for providing enhanced television broadcasting of claim19, wherein the reporting comprises displaying the relative scores inranked order within a leaderboard.
 21. The enhanced broadcasting systemof claim 1 further comprising: an authoring system for generating theinstruction of the code fragment such that the instruction is correlatedto the content of the audio and video broadcast signal.
 22. The enhancedbroadcasting system of claim 21 wherein the authoring system generatesthe instruction of the code fragment as the audio and video broadcastsignal is broadcast.
 23. The enhanced broadcasting system of claim 1further comprising: a push server for delivering the code fragment tothe computer.
 24. An enhanced broadcasting system for presenting audioor video broadcasts and related enhancements, the system comprising: areceiver that receives an audio and video broadcast signal; a firstdisplay, connected to the receiver, for displaying content of the audioand video broadcast signal; a computer configured to receive a codefragment and execute at least one instruction in the code fragment tolocally modify a document stored at the computer in an exclusively localinteraction based on the at least one instruction, the code fragmentcorrelated to the content of the audio and video broadcast signal; and asecond display, connected to the computer, having a screen display thatdisplays the document at a first time and displays a subsequentmodification to the document based upon the computer's execution of theat least one instruction in the code fragment at a second time.
 25. Theenhanced broadcasting system of claim 24, wherein the code fragment iswritten in JavaScript.
 26. The enhanced broadcasting system of claim 24,wherein the computer receives the code fragment through a communicationnetwork.
 27. The enhanced broadcasting system of claim 26, wherein thecommunication network is the Internet.
 28. The enhanced broadcastingsystem of claim 24, further comprising an input device configured toreceive an input from the user based on the updated screen display ofthe second display unit.
 29. The enhanced broadcasting system of claim28, further comprising a transmitter that transmits the input from theuser to a broadcaster, the broadcaster composing the second broadcastsignal.
 30. The enhanced broadcasting system of claim 1, wherein theinstruction of the code fragment is interpreted to locally modify thedocument for a limited interactivity period.
 31. The method of claim 13,further comprising; receiving the input from the user of the clientcomputer during a limited interactivity period; executing software onthe client computer to analyze the input; assigning points to the useraccording to the analyzed input only during the limited interactivityperiod, such that the user accumulates an earned score.
 32. The enhancedbroadcasting system of claim 24, wherein: the computer is furtherconfigured to receive an input from a user during a limitedinteractivity period.
 33. A method for providing enhanced televisionbroadcasting, the method comprising: selecting a common time for asynchronized presentation of an audio and video signal and a relatedenhancement, the related enhancement including an instruction;broadcasting the audio and video signal for receipt by a broadcastreceiver; sending the related enhancement from a server computer over anetwork for receipt by a client computer; displaying the audio and videosignal on a first display screen at the common time; interpreting atleast one instruction included in the related enhancement, whichinstruction is correlated to the content of the audio and video signal;locally modifying a document based on the interpreted instruction;displaying the modified document on a screen display which is updatedbased upon the interpreted instruction on a second display screen at thecommon time; receiving an input from a user of the client computerduring a limited interactivity period; and executing software on theclient computer to analyze the input only during the limitedinteractivity period.
 34. The method of claim 33, further comprisingsynchronizing the limited interactivity period for user input with aperiod in the displayed audio and video signal.
 35. The method of claim33, further sending another instruction from the server computer to theclient computer instructing the software executing on the clientcomputer to end the limited interactivity period.